Ryan Gregg had a lot riding on Sunday's nail-biting AFC championship game between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Baltimore Ravens. And it wasn't just a casual sports bet.

At stake was a contract to produce 16,400 Pittsburgh Steelers Super Bowl T-shirts for Reebok to ship to JCPenney stores around the country.

Tina Reed | The Ann Arbor NewsScio Township resident Ryan O'Reilly, 28, folds some of the last Pittsburgh Steelers Superbowl T-shirts to come off a conveyor belt Monday afternoon at Underground Printing. The company worked to meet a one-day deadline to ship the T-shirts to JC Penny stores around the country.

The Steelers won, 23-14.

On Monday, workers at Underground Printing - the Scio Township-based company co-owned by Gregg - printed the shirts for shipment that day.

If the Steelers had lost? "It's all waste," Gregg said of the contract.

UGP has been one of a handful of printers Reebok uses for its apparel following major sporting events, including the NBA finals since 2003, the last three Super Bowls, and last year's Stanley Cup Finals..

In 2006, UGP printed Steelers Super Bowl apparel as well.

The company has two locations in the Ann Arbor area and four in the state of Michigan. It offers custom printed shirts and other apparel online and at its 12 locations. All of its apparel goods are printed and embroidered in-house at UGP 36,000-square-foot Scio Township facility.